Elaboration: of religious ritual
   Eliot, T.S.
   Elizabeth I, Queen
   death
   Emmanuel College, Cambridge
   England: late Elizabethan,
   resistance to unity with other
   countries, social order
   English Catholics: Bible translation
   plots by, return
   from Continent, see also
   Gunpowder Plot; Roman
   Catholicism
   English language
   English Translation of the Epistles of
   Paul the Apostle (MS no.98)
   Englishness: in KJB
   Epistle Dedicatory (KJB)
   Erasmus, Desiderius
   Essex, Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of
   Eton College
   Europe: violence in
   Executions
   Exotic goods
   Expenditure: royal household
   Exton (Lincolnshire)
   Extremists (religious)
   Eyre, William
   Fairclough (or Featley), Richard
   Fawkes, Guy
   Fenton, Roger
   Fincham, Kenneth
   Floods: as symbol
   Fontenoy (French agent)
   Food
   Foxe, John: Book of Martyrs
   Fuller, Thomas
   Fulman, William
   Galloway, Patrick
   Gardens see Plants
   Garnet, Henry
   Genesis, Book of
   Geneva Bible: Andrewes uses, on
   God’s elect, James I’s attitude
   to language style
   marginal notes
   on meaning of names
   popularity, printing style
   publication
   rights Puritans’ preference
   for, as
   source for KJB, translated
   by small team
   Gettysburg address
   Glass
   Golf
   Great Bible (1539)
   Great Britain see also England
   Greek language
   Grindal, Edmund, Archbishop of
   Canterbury
   Gunpowder Plot (1605)
   Gutenberg Bible
   Hadleigh (Suffolk)
   Hakluyt, Richard
   Hampton Court Conference (1604)
   Harding, John
   Harington, Sir John
   Harmar, John
   Harrison, Thomas
   Harvey, William
   Harwood, Edward
   Hatfield House (Hertfordshire)
   Hely, Thomas
   Henry IV, King
   Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales
   Herbert, George
   Hermaphrodites
   Hieron, Samuel
   Hildersham, Arthur
   Hinchinbrooke Abbey (Huntingdon)
   Hinde, William
   Hindlip House (Worcestershire)
   Holland, Thomas
   Holt, Mr and Miss (of Boxworth)
   Holyrood House (Edinburgh)
   Household (royal): expenditure
   Howard, Henry see Northampton Ist
   Earl of
   Hudson, Henry
   Hunting
   Hutchinson, Ralph
   Hutchinson, William
   Hutten, Leonard
   Hutton, Matthew
   Immingham (Lincolnshire)
   Incense
   Inclusiveness
   Individuality, see also Private
   spirit
   Innovation: hostility to
   Inspiration
   Integration
   Ireland
   Irenicon: new Bible as
   James I, King (James VI of Scotland):
   accession to English throne
   appearance
   arrival in London compared to
   Solomon
   conflict with Parliament early
   life and Elizabeth I
   and Epistle Dedicatory to KJB
   first Parliament, at
   Hampton Court Conference
   influence on England
   involvement in
   translation process and
   jointness, love of libraries
   moderation, and money
   motto
   obsession with words
   personal vision for new Bible
   personality
   and plague
   portraits of and
   Presbyterianism, and religious
   debate taste for alcohol
   Jerusalem Chamber
   Jesuits (Society of Jesus)
   John Chrysostom, St see Chrysostom
   St John
   Joint endeavour
   Jones, Inigo
   Jonson, Ben
   Masque of Blackness, Volpone
   King, Geoffrey
   King James Bible: in America
   anonymity of Translators, as
   Authorised Version and
   Bishops’ Bible, blueprint for
   born of optimism
   clarity and richness
   compared to
   Tyndale’s version
   conservatism early
   indifference to Epistle
   Dedicatory to, financing
   of first printing
   first suggested
   frontispiece, instructions
   for, intended to be read
   aloud invisibility of
   translation process, language
   manuscript
   musicality, polarities
   confronted in, Preface
   Puritan influence on
   relevance to today see also
   Translators
   King, Martin Luther
   Knewstubs, John
   Knighthoods
   Knox, John
   Koine (form of Greek language)
   Lambeth Palace Library
   Language: authority of, loss of
   religious, quality of in
   KJB, richness of
   use of original
   see also Greek language;
   Latin language
   Latin language: as lingua franca
   Laud, William, Archbishop of
   Canterbury
   Layfield, John
   Legal process
   Libraries, see
   also Lambeth Palace Library
   Licences: for ministers to preach
   Light, of
   understanding see also
   Blackness; Darkness
   Lightfoot, John
   Literacy
   Lively, Edward
   London: conditions in
   and food, gaols in, native
   plants in, and plague
   Luck
   Luther, Martin
   Luxury
   Machiavelli, Niccolò
   Majesty: idea of
   see also Monarchy
   Manningham, John
   Manuscript number (Lambeth
   Palace Library) see English
   Translation of the Epistles of Paul the
   Apostle
   Marginal notes
   Marriage
   Martial (Marcus Valerius Martialis)
   Mary, Queen of Scots
   Masque of Solomon and Queen of
   Sheba
   Mathematics
   Matthew, Thomas (John Rogers):
   Bible
   Matthew, Tobias
   Maypoles
   Melville, Andrew
   Merton College, Oxford
   Middleton, Thomas
   Mildmay, Sir Walter
   Millenary Petition
   Milton, John
   Miraculous draught of fishes:
   translations of
   Misprints
   Monarchy: authority
   relationship to
   church see also Majesty
   More, Sir Thomas
   Morton, Thomas, Bishop of Chester
   (then of Lichfield and of Durham)
   Mottoes
   Mountagu (or Montagu), James
   Bishop of Winchester
  
 Muscovy Company
   Music: and KJB
   Mystery: in religion
   Names: Biblical
   Narrative skill
   Nasmyth, James
   Neville, Henry
   Neville, Thomas
   New English Bible,
   Newark (Nottinghamshire)
   Newcastle-upon-Tyne
   Newhouse (Ward’s tutor)
   Northampton, Henry Howard Ist
   Earl of
   Numerology
   Nunc Dimittis
   Oldcorne, Father Edward
   Orwell, Anne
   Overall, John
   Paine, Gustavus
   Parker, Richard
   Parliament
   Paul, St, Epistles: I Corinthians
   II Corinthians
   Hebrews
   Romans
   Peerages
   Pennywort
   Peryn (or Pern), John
   Peter, St
   Peterborough, Bishop of see Dove
   Thomas
   Pickering, Lewis
   Pilgrim Fathers
   Plague
   Plants and gardens
   Polarities: confronted in KJB
   Portraiture
   Prayer Book see Book of Common
   Prayer
   Pre-destination
   Preface (to KJB)
   Presbyterianism: in Cambridge
   excluded from Translators
   and Hampton Court Conference
   James I and, and
   language of Bible translation
   opposition to English bishops
   Priests: qualifications
   Printing
   Private spirit, see also Ego;
   Individuality
   Privy Council
   destruction of documents
   and Separatists
   Protestantism (English)
   Prynne, William
   Psalms: No. No.
   Ptolemy: Almagest
   Pullein, Thomas
   Puns
   Puritanism and Puritans: attitude to
   the Cross, believe
   Reformation unachieved in
   England, and Biblical names
   in conflict with bishops
   destroy maypoles, and
   Hampton Court Conference
   and language of Bible
   translation, meaning of terms
   on plague, Thomas
   Neville opposes, as Translators
   welcome James I’s
   accession see also Barrow
   Henry; Separatists
   Rabbet, Michael
   Radcliffe, Jeremiah
   Raleigh, Sir Walter
   Ravens, Ralph
   Ravis, Thomas
   Reformation (English)
   and language
   Rembrandt van Rijn
   Revised Version (1885)
   Revising committee
   payment of
   Reynolds, John
   at Hampton Court
   Conference
   Rhetoric
   Rich, Sir Henry
   Richardson, John
   Rizzio, David
   Robinson, Henry, Bishop of Carlisle
   Roman Catholicism
   see also English Catholics;
   Jesuits
   St Giles, Cripplegate
   Salisbury, Robert Cecil Ist Earl of
   see Cecil, Robert
   Sancroft, William, Archbishop of
   Canterbury
   Sanderson, Thomas
   Saravaia, Hadrian à
   Savile, Sir Henry: appearance and
   personality, Bois and
   European tour life
   and career, and St John
   Chrysostom
   subversive activities
   Scapula, Joannes: Greek-Latin
   lexicon
   Schott, Andreas
   Scientific enquiry
   Scotland
   Screws: as symbols
   Scrivener, Frederick
   Scrooby Separatists
   Scroope, Philadelphia, Lady (nè 2e Carey)
   Security: false sense of
   Selby, John
   Selden, John
   Separatists: Andrewes opposes
   Bancroft represses
   on church
   organisation emigrate
   to America, emphasis on the
   word, excluded from
   Translators, flight and
   persecution of, name
   read Geneva Bible, services
   as subversives, see
   also Puritanism; Scrooby Separatists
   Septuagint
   Sexual language: translation of
   Shakespeare, William King
   Lear, Othello
   The Tempest
   Shrewsbury, Gilbert Talbot, 7th Earl
   of
   Sidney, Sir Philip
   Sidney, Robert
   Simplicity
   Smith, Miles, Bishop of Gloucester:
   contributes summaries and running
   heads to KJB, life and career
   Preface to KJB
   quotes from Geneva Bible
   and translation of KJB
   on virtuous man
   Smyth, John
   Social order
   Society of Antiquaries
   Solomon and Sheba see Masque of
   Solomon and Queen of Sheba
   Song of Songs, The
   Spain, war with England
   Sparke (or Sparkes), Thomas
   Speed, John
   Spencer, John
   Spoken word
   Stained glass
   Stamford (Lincolnshire)
   Stationers’ Hall, see also
   Bois, John
   Stationers’ Register
   Studley, Daniel
   Submission: and social order, of
   the Translators
   Suffolk, Thomas Howard, Ist Earl of
   Supremacy (royal), see also
   Authority; Monarchy
   Surplice, the
   Sussex: Puritanism in
   Symbolism (religious)
   see also Cross, the
   Tacitus
   Theobalds (Hertfordshire house)
   Thirty Years War
   Thomson, Richard
   Tighe, Robert
   Torture
   Translation: of non-sacred texts
   Translators (of KJB): achievement
   anonymity of, chosen by
   Bancroft, committee structure
   instructions to
   lack of payment to
   procedure, Puritans
   amongst, revision
   committee
   Tresham, Francis
   Truth: and antiquity, derived
   from scripture, Garnet on
   withholding and light
   Tyndale, William: aims for plain
   style
   influence on Translators of KJB
   interpretations of word meanings
   martyred, translates
   Bible alone in exile
   Ussher, James, Archbishop of
   Armagh
   Villiers, George see Buckingham Ist
   Duke of
   Walker, Anthony: biography of John
   Bois
   Walsingham, Sir Francis
   Ward, Robert
   Ward, Samuel
   diary
   Waters, Roger
   Westminster Abbey
   Whitchurch, Edward: Bible
   Whitgift, John, Archbishop of
   Canterbury: death, at Hampton
   Court Conference
   Wicked Bible
   Widdowes, Giles
   Willoughby, E.E.
   Wilson, Thomas
   Wood, Anthony à
   Word, the: Andrewes’ devotion to
   conflict with ceremony
   as foundation, of God
   Puritans and see also
   Language
   Wordsworth, William: ’On
   Westminster Bridge’
   Worksop (Nottinghamshire)
   Wre
n, Sir Christopher
   Wycliffe, John
   York
   About the Author
   Adam Nicolson has been both a publisher and a travel writer, and is the author of many award-winning books, including Sea Room, about life on the Shiant Isles. He lives on a farm with his family near Burwash, England.
   Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.
   Praise for God’s Secretaries
   “The King James Bible is the greatest work ever written in English, period…The story of how it came into being has been told many times—told, that is, to such extent as it can be told…So few documents have survived this labor—apart, of course, from the translation itself—that piecing together the tale is at least as much a matter of intelligent guesswork as of hard research. This is what Adam Nicolson has done, and he has done it extraordinarily well. In fewer than 250 pages…God’s Secretaries places the King James Version in historical context, brings vividly to life many of those who worked on it…gives a plausible account of how the task was accomplished, and conveys in Nicolson’s own passionate prose the full grandeur of the translation.”
   —Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post
   “How the King James Bible came about is the theme of Adam Nicolson’s fine book, God’s Secretaries. It is a popular book as popular books used to be, a breeze rather than a scholarly sweat, but humanely erudite, elegantly written, passionately felt…”
   —James Wood, The New Yorker
   “This scrupulously elegant account of the creation of what four centuries of history has confirmed is the finest English-language work of all time is entirely true to its subject: Adam Nicolson’s lapidary prose is masterly, his measured account both as readable as the curious demand and as dignified as the story deserves.”
   —Simon Winchester, author of The Professor and the Madman
   “Mr. Nicolson vividly describes the historical moment…[and] makes that far-away world fresh for today’s readers. And he makes the King James Bible seem all the more remarkable—for being the product of a divided age, when grudging cooperation led to a masterpiece of faith and purpose.”
   —The Wall Street Journal
   “The King James Bible: Its effect on our vernacular and literature is probably as deep and as lasting as that of its near contemporary, the canon of William Shakespeare himself…Adam Nicolson’s re-creation of [the world of the King James Bible] is beyond praise. In God’s Secretaries he brings off a brilliant freehand portrait.”
   —Christopher Hitchens, The New York Times Book Review
   “Nicolson tells the King James Version’s story so well that God’s Secretaries may prove to be the King James Version’s indispensable companion for years to come.”
   —Booklist, starred review
   “God’s Secretaries is readily accessible to the informed reader. Its emphasis on background social influences makes the King James Version and its era come alive. Recommended for public libraries.”
   —Library Journal
   Credits
   Jacket design by Roberto de Vicq de Cumptich
   Jacket illustration: The Somerset House Conference, 1604, by courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery, London
   Copyright
   James I and VI: “Blessed is that Blesse you.” Copyright(c) The Huntington Library, San Marino, California. Reprinted with permission.
   
 
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